5.1 About four in ten registered voters think policies that promote clean energy will improve economic growth and create jobs.
About four in ten registered voters (42%) think policies that promote clean energy will improve economic growth and create jobs, while 35% think it will have the opposite effect, reducing growth and costing jobs, and 20% think it will have no impact either way.The full text of the survey item and response categories are: Please indicate which one of these statements comes closest to your own views – even if it is not exactly right: Overall, government policies intended to transition away from fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas) and toward clean energy (solar, wind) will… (a) Improve economic growth and provide new jobs; (b) Have no impact on economic growth or jobs; (c) Reduce economic growth and cost jobs.
Opinion is sharply divided along political lines; majorities of liberal Democrats (77%) and moderate/conservative Democrats (53%) think clean energy policies will have a positive impact on the economy and jobs. By contrast, more liberal/moderate Republicans think such policies will have a negative impact (48%) than a positive impact (21%), and 70% of conservative Republicans think the policies will have a negative impact, while only 14% think they will have a positive effect.
5.2 Most registered voters think the clean energy industry will create more good jobs than the fossil fuel industry.
A majority of registered voters (55%) think increasing production of clean energy in the U.S. will produce more new jobs than increasing fossil fuel production, while 43% think the opposite (that increasing fossil fuel production will create more jobs than increasing clean energy production).The full text of the survey item and response categories are: Generally speaking, which do you think will produce more good jobs in the U.S.? (a) Increasing production of clean energy such as wind and solar; (b) Increasing production of fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas.
Nearly all liberal Democrats (91%) and a large majority of moderate/conservative Democrats (71%) think clean energy production will produce more good jobs. In contrast, majorities of liberal/moderate Republicans (62%) and conservative Republicans (82%) think increasing fossil fuel production will create more good U.S. jobs.